Edgar G. Ulmer’s Film The Black Cat: An Eighty-Year Retrospective Ronald Duke Saltinski* ARTICLE INFO ABSTRACT Available Online July 2014 Director Edgar G. Ulmer’s film The Black Cat was a rare achievement in American horror cinema when released in 1934. Some eighty years Key words: afterwards in 2014 The Black Cat warrants revisiting as one of the most Edgar G. Ulmer; unique and revered horror films ever made. The Black Cat is German The Black Cat; expressionist in character, perverse and morbid, portraying the post-World 1930s horror films War I gothic mind of Europe. The film encompasses the rage and revenge of that war with motifs of murder, narcotics, torture, necrophilia, incest, and Satanic rituals; all of which are witnessed by a young America couple who have innocently traveled into a nightmarish tragedy. Rarely has a film like The Black Cat so captured the mood of horror blended with an intellectual narrative, unique acting, modernist settings, and classical music. Paul A. Cantor said “The Black Cat was a triumph for Ulmer; many consider it one of the most sophisticated and powerful horror stories ever made” (p. 142). Years later The Black Cat would be characterized as an “art film,” and even “read as a piece of intellectual cinema” (Schwaab, p. 46). Introduction Director Edgar G. Ulmer was born in 1904, Olomouc, Czechoslovakia and grew up in Vienna, Austria. Ulmer led a storied life that passed back and forth through the metropolitan cities of Europe and America, finally settling in Hollywood, California. In 1972 Edgar R. Ulmer passed away in Woodland Hills, California. “Ulmer’s early film career was undoubtedly auspicious, although it has been somewhat embellished by grandiose and largely specious claims made by the director himself - or perhaps more accurately, by the émigré director, who no longer intended to return home and continually reinvented himself in America” (Isenberg, p. 2). Ulmer had his grand debut as the director for The Black Cat (1934) that anchored Hollywood’s Universal horror cycle that started with Dracula and Frankenstein, both in 1931, and ended with Son of Frankenstein (1939). Ulmer created a film that is entirely unlike any other made in Hollywood. Everson said, “The striking quality of the film creates a decidedly non-Hollywood and non-stereotyped horror film. The milieu and backgrounds are unusually convincing; its incidental background and establishing shots have the same look of subdued melancholy as many authentic East European films of the period” (p. 123). Unique to the neophyte director Ulmer was the degree of individual initiative he was allowed in making the film. George Carol Sims (pen name Peter Ruric) wrote the screenplay based on Ulmer’s scenario. The settings of the film’s scenes were heavily influenced by Ulmer’s sense of style and design with Charles D. Hall serving as Art Director. The unusually unique camera compositions for the film were under the direction of John J. Mescall with editing by Ray Curtiss. Heinz Eric Roemheld compiled the classical musical scoring for the film. That such a remarkable film, under 65-minutes in length, was completed on time (fifteen days) and on budget ($95,000) was an accomplishment that would become a trademark of Ulmer’s filmmaking. For Universal Studios, The Black Cat was a box-office success generating over $236,000 in profit. Of special note was Ulmer’s relative freedom of censorship over the morbid mix of perversions that characterize the personalities of the two primary actors. The studio censor, Joseph Breen, urged caution on scenes involving torture, like “skinning alive,” nudity, and allusions to rape, incest and necrophilia in the film. Worland addressed Breen’s lenient regard for the Black Mass scenes that “devil worship seemingly fell within acceptable bounds so long as there was no suggestion of the performance of any sexual rite” (p. 125). However * School of Education, National University, United States, E-mail: [email protected] 1 | P a g e Journal of Arts and Humanities (JAH), Volume -3, No.-7, July, 2014 on one issue, Breen was very adamant that there be no mistreatment of the black cat at any time. True to Breen’s edict, Boris Karloff would be seen in several scenes tenderly holding and petting the black cat comfortably draped in his arms. The black cat would go on to freely prowl the hallways of the house and underground fortress, appearing in several dramatic scenes. Unknowingly, Ulmer had “dodged” the future censorship bullet. Just months after the release of The Black Cat in mid-1934 Hollywood instituted a new program of censorship rules known as the PCA or Production Code Administration (Schumach). Given the censorship strict rules of the PCA The Black Cat would have never been released. For the next twenty years horror films would never be the same as they were before 1934. In large part Ulmer owed his success with the film to the roles played by two leading actors Boris Karloff and Bela Lagosi. Both actors were originally from Europe; Boris Karloff was born William Henry Pratt in London, England and Bela Lagosi was born Béla Ferenc Dezső Blaskó in Romania. Boris Karloff never became an American citizen. Bela Lagosi became an American citizen in 1931. Praising the duo Greg Mank commented, “The Black Cat would be their most glorious teaming. Karloff’s Lascivious Lucifer versus Lugosi’s Avenging Angel makes The Black Cat transcend the horror movie genre, and become a grand, lunatic fairy tale, sparked by a wickedly imaginative director, a bewitched camera and a properly epic romantic score” (p. 198). An Ominous Beginning Over the years since the release of The Black Cat many scholars have examined literally every aspect of the film. Many judgments of the film have been made across the passage of time from 1934 right into the new millennia of 2014. Some aspects of these studies are presented and elaborated upon in this essay. In particular Edgar G. Ulmer’s role for the black cat in the film is given more acclaim than in past commentaries. The story begins with scenes of transit, a crowed bustling European train station with carts of luggage and bags passing back and forth. Aboard the Orient Express are the newly weds Peter (David Manners) and Joan Allison (Julie Bishop) traveling to the Carpathian Mountains. Peter and Joan are shown affectionately in their cheery, brightly lit compartment anticipating their arrival at a luxury resort. Dr. Vitus Werdegast (Bela Lagosi) intrudes politely and the scene suddenly turns serious and somber. The matrimonial bliss of the Alison’s disappears. “Werdegast is enraptured by the sight of Joan, who Ulmer captures in several revealing point-of- view shots – a foretelling sign of things to come” (Isenberg, pp. 5-6). In these scenes Werdegast has trespassed a treasured right of Americans – privacy, and yet an American sense of politeness opens the door to their journey through the coming Hell. After the train arrives at their destination, Werdegast and the Americans share a ride in a bus during a raging rainstorm. Werdegast’s destination is Hjalmar Poelzig’s (Boris Karloff) home for a reunion of sorts. The bus driver tells the story of the where the house is built: “All of this country was one of the greatest battlefields of the war. Tens of thousands of men died here. The ravine down there was piled twelve deep with dead and wounded men. The little river below was swollen red, a raging torrent of blood. And that high hill yonder where Engineer Poelzig now lives was the site of Fort Marmorus. He built his home on its very foundations. Marmorus is the greatest graveyard in the world” (The Black Cat). In creating this grim setting for the home of Poelzig, Ulmer no doubt called upon the photographic record of the devastation and perhaps even more so given his propensity for German expressionism, the paintings of the German artists George Grosz and Otto Dix. Both artists had served in The Great War (World War I) and afterwards created painted canvases showing the gruesome realities of war in the trenches. On route the bus slides off a small ravine and the driver is killed. Joan is rendered unconscious. Peter, Werdegast, and Werdegast’s valet carrying Joan make their way to Poelzig’s home. The continuing rainstorm adds to the gloomy trek. Once inside Poelzig’s house, Werdegast administers a narcotic to Joan ostensibly to rest her during her recovery. “A Masterpiece of Construction” Alison Peirse said “The American horror genre may provide certain necessary narrative tropes for the film, but it is the Bauhaus that provides a physical frame for the building, while art deco inspires the (interior) decoration” (p. 106). The Gothic atmosphere of the film is not lost despite taking place in a modernistic house 2 | P a g e Edgar G. Ulmer’s Film The Black Cat: An Eighty-Year Retrospective Ronald Duke Saltinski whose design is in the Bauhaus style of architecture (Architecture of Film). The exterior is one of straight, clean lines, with brightly lit strip windows. The interior consists of titled ceilings and walls, art deco furnishings (tubular chairs and tables, neon adorned and accentuated speaker grilles, sliding doors, continuously lit ceiling panels, curved metal staircases, and sliding doors). Below the contemporary house, true to a Gothic setting is the fortress foundation with long corridors, spiral staircases, secret rooms, and rotating mounts for large artillery guns (that were removed during the building of the house). The fortress is clinically clean and minimalist in style; no H.P. Lovecraft dungeons, cobwebs, water seepage between rotted castle stones, or rats running amok.
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